Skip to main content

Justice & Law Quote by Barack Obama

"America and Islam are not exclusive and need not be in competition. Instead, they overlap, and share common principles of justice and progress, tolerance and the dignity of all human beings"

About this Quote

Obama’s line is less kumbaya than counter-programming: a deliberate attempt to collapse a post-9/11 storyline that treated “America” and “Islam” as rival civilizational brands. By rejecting “exclusive” and “competition,” he’s not just preaching tolerance; he’s denying the basic premise that identity has to be a zero-sum contest. That’s a political move with policy consequences, because it reframes Muslim belonging as compatible with national loyalty rather than perpetually suspect.

The word choice is calibrated for both domestic anxiety and international credibility. “Overlap” is doing quiet work: it suggests shared space, not reluctant coexistence. It also dodges theology and sticks to civic language, a classic Obama tactic when he wants to sound moral without sounding sectarian. The list that follows - “justice and progress, tolerance and the dignity of all human beings” - isn’t random. It’s the vocabulary of American self-mythology (civil rights, democratic ideals) used as a bridge to Islam, implying that the real conflict isn’t between religions, but between those principles and the forces that violate them.

Subtext: you can’t win a fight against extremism by treating a billion-plus people as an alien bloc. You also can’t claim to champion human rights while indulging Islamophobia at home. Contextually, this sits in the era when the U.S. was trying to repair its standing after Iraq, torture revelations, and the security-state reflexes that blurred into cultural hostility. Obama is staking a wager: that inclusion is strategy, not sentiment, and that the “dignity” frame can outcompete fear.

Quote Details

TopicHuman Rights
SourceBarack Obama, "Remarks by the President at Cairo University ('A New Beginning')," Cairo, Egypt, June 4, 2009 (transcript).
CiteCite this Quote

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Obama, Barack. (n.d.). America and Islam are not exclusive and need not be in competition. Instead, they overlap, and share common principles of justice and progress, tolerance and the dignity of all human beings. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/america-and-islam-are-not-exclusive-and-need-not-25213/

Chicago Style
Obama, Barack. "America and Islam are not exclusive and need not be in competition. Instead, they overlap, and share common principles of justice and progress, tolerance and the dignity of all human beings." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/america-and-islam-are-not-exclusive-and-need-not-25213/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"America and Islam are not exclusive and need not be in competition. Instead, they overlap, and share common principles of justice and progress, tolerance and the dignity of all human beings." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/america-and-islam-are-not-exclusive-and-need-not-25213/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Barack Add to List
America and Islam are not exclusive and share principles
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Barack Obama

Barack Obama (born August 4, 1961) is a President from USA.

123 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes